OTT messaging traffic will be twice volume of P2P SMS traffic this year
The volume of OTT messaging traffic is set to be twice that of P2P SMS messaging by the end of the year, according to data collected by Informa Telecoms & Media.
Daily OTT messaging traffic has already overtaken daily P2P SMS traffic in terms of volume, according to newly collected data from Informa, with an average of 19.1 billion OTT messages sent per day in 2012, compared with an average of 17.6 billion P2P SMS messages.
By the end of 2013, Informa estimates that 41 billion OTT messages will be sent every day, compared with an average of 19.5 billion P2P SMS messages. There are far more P2P SMS users than there are OTT messaging users: There were about 3.5 billion P2P SMS users in 2012, according to Informa, compared with about 586.3 million users of OTT messaging. Each OTT user sent an average of 32.6 OTT messages a day, compared with just five SMS messages per day per P2P SMS user, meaning that OTT-messaging users are sending more than six times as many messages as P2P SMS users do.
It has taken OTT messaging about five years to reach this point; BlackBerry Messenger was launched in 2007, and a number of other messaging apps have launched at various intervals since then. By contrast, the first SMS was sent about 20 years ago, with the first commercial service launching a couple of years later.
Even though SMS and OTT messaging are two different services, and are used in different ways by subscribers, Informa believes that a comparison of the average daily traffic of the two services is relevant, given that OTT messaging is increasingly used as a substitute for SMS in a number of markets.
Mobile subscribers’ adoption of OTT messaging has had a significant impact on mobile operators’ SMS traffic and revenues in some countries, including Spain, the Netherlands and South Korea. For example, mobile operators’ SMS revenues in Spain have declined dramatically, down from €1.1 billion (US$1.4 billion) in 2007 to €758.5 million in 2011.
It is unlikely that SMS will die out anytime soon, however. Informa forecasts that global SMS revenues and traffic will continue to increase through 2016, for three main reasons: The adoption and use of OTT-messaging apps is far from universal; although there are multiple OTT-messaging “communities” within which mobile users can message each other for free, OTT-messaging users typically use SMS when communicating with non-OTT users; and SMS is starting to hit its stride in the enterprise mobile messaging market.
Note: Over-the-top (OTT)-messaging applications are downloadable applications for smartphones that enable subscribers to send text (instant) messages for free to users of the same application, using their mobile data plan or Wi-Fi. P2P SMS is person-to-person SMS.
About the VoIP and IP messaging: Operator strategies to combat the threat from OTT players report
This report (www.informatandm.com/messagingip) provides a detailed analysis of the OTT-IP-communications market, including an evaluation of the threat that OTT IP communications represents to mobile operators, market enablers and inhibitors, operators’ strategies for OTT communications and the outlook for OTT IP-based messaging for operators and OTT providers.
For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact:
Bethan Casey
Marketing and PR,
Informa Telecoms & Media
Email: pr.enquiries@informa.com
Tel: + 44 (0) 207 017 4994
Twitter: @informatm_pr
About Informa Telecoms & Media Informa Telecoms & Media (www.informatandm.com) is the leading provider of business intelligence and strategic services to the global telecoms and media markets.